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If you have created a new chord that is not in the database and meets all the conditions, it is displayed in dark gray. Chords that are incompletely displayed are gray The missing notes are yellow.
![oahu guitar identification oahu guitar identification](https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20190319/cccdbc71b8ffcdbeb0b4707cafb3211a.jpg)
When the chord is found, it is displayed in blue.
OAHU GUITAR IDENTIFICATION HOW TO
We've got an original Gibson Nick Lucas in the shop with a similar maple body. How To Use Chord Identifier (Reverse Chord Finder) Click notes on the guitar fretboard. This guitar is in very good condition for ita age. It has BB stamped on the edge of the headstock and 1522XX stamped on the back of the headstock with 1490X stamped over it. The guitar is crack-free and all original other than the neck re-carve. Here is a 1950s Oahu Diana electric lap steel guitar. Cash or check (if permitted) will be accepted. Tuition and lab fees for general interest classes must be paid at the time of registration. Students will be notified of any changes or cancellation of classes. Also, a carbon rod was added under the fingerboard that will keep the neck arrow straight for years to come. The administration reserves the right to cancel any class which lacks sufficient enrollment. The restoration involved mainly the neck: Recarving the shape to a slight Vee with a 1-¾" nut width, creating a new radiused fingerboard (originals were flat - for the Hawaiian style of playing) and inlaying the original pearl vine (the original fingerboards were a thin veneer that did not provide much structural support), refretting, new binding and then a sunburst finish true to the original neck (with a little 'relic-ing' for good measure.) The neck angle was also reset so the action is excellent.
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The 1937 Oahu catalog lists the Oahu Jumbo as selling for $98.00 and the Oahu Deluxe Jumbo sold for a whopping $158.00! This guitar features an L-00 size top, but a body as deep as a dreadnaught and a long 25.75" scale length. These x-braced models are consistantly excellent guitars and were not "bargain basement" instruments by any means. This construction and dimensions explain why the early Oahu Jumbos are often referred to as the 'Nick Lucas' version, since it shares that coveted guitar's dimensions. The subject guitar is of the first phase, factory X-braced with a 4 1/2" body depth. The Oahu Jumbo evolved in essentially two phases, the first being X-braced and 14 1/2" across at the lower bout, and the second phase, beginning in '36, measured 15 1/2" across the lower bout and was usually ladder braced. Oahu catalogs offered a number of quality, high-end flat tops through the thirties, with the X-braced early '30s 'Jumbo' and 'Jumbo Deluxe' being the most sought by players today.